It can't find your kernel; try editing grub commands when you restart your computer; it is probably looking on the wrong disk.

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Linux since 1999A good general beginners book for Linux :- http://rute.2038bug.com/index.html.gz (http://rute.2038bug.com/index.html.gz)A good Debian read :- http://debian-handbook.info/get/now/ (http://debian-handbook.info/get/now/)

To edit grub, when the grub screen comes up, press 'e' to edit the boot line, likely this is pointing to the wrong drive, it should be the first.(It probably has sdb, it should be sda.) Once booted, go to /boot/grub & alter the configuration file with the same drive.

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Linux since 1999A good general beginners book for Linux :- http://rute.2038bug.com/index.html.gz (http://rute.2038bug.com/index.html.gz)A good Debian read :- http://debian-handbook.info/get/now/ (http://debian-handbook.info/get/now/)